Developmental changes of plant in the regulation of photosynthate distribution of leaves were studied in hydroponically cultivated rice by the 14CO2 tracer technique and analysis of the activity of the regulatory enzymes, sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), and pyruvate kinase (PK). The distribution of primary photosynthates into sugars, amino acids, organic acids, sugar phosphates, proteins, and polysaccharides was determined by column chromatography. The relative primary photosynthate distribution to the sugar phosphate fraction was significantly larger in the 5th leaf than in the 6th one. Correspondingly, the Vmax of PEPC was significantly higher in the 5th than in the 6th leaf, while no significant differences between leaves were detected in the other enzymes. As a consequence, the ratio of the Vmax of SPS and PEPC was lower in the 5th than in the 6th leaf. As the 5th leaf develops before panicle initiation in rice, it predominantly supports vegetative growth, while the 6th leaf develops after panicle initiation and thus contributes mainly to reproductive growth. We conclude that the physiological properties of each leaf are regulated developmentally. When the 6th leaf became fully expanded (corresponding to the panicle initiation stage of plant), the distribution pattern of 14C was transiently changed in the 5th leaf, indicating that individual organs that are mainly involved in vegetative development are affected to some extent by the whole-plant-level physiological transformation that occurs at the transition from the vegetative to the reproductive stage. and T. Shinano ... [et al.].
mRNA expression patterns of genes for metabolic key enzymes sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), pyruvate kinase, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, glutamine synthetase 1, and glutamine synthetase 2 were investigated in leaves of rice plants grown at two nitrogen (N) supplies (N0.5, N3.0). The relative gene expression patterns were similar in all leaves except for 9th leaf, in which mRNA levels were generally depressed. Though increased N supply prolonged the expression period of each mRNA, it did not affect the relative expression intensity of any mRNA in a given leaf. SPS Vmax, SPS limiting and PEPC activities, and carbon flow were examined. The ratio between PEPC activity and SPS Vmax was higher in leaves developed at the vegetative growth stage (vegetative leaves: 5th and 7th leaves) than in leaves developed after the ear primordia formation stage (reproductive leaves: 9th and flag leaves). PEPC activity and SPS Vmax decreased with declining leaf N content. After using 14CO2 the 14C photosynthate distribution in the amino acid fraction was higher in vegetative than in reproductive leaves when compared for the same leaf N status. Thus, at high PEPC/SPS activities ratio, more 14C photosynthate was distributed to the amino acid pool, whereas at higher SPS activity more 14C was channelled into the saccharide fraction. Thus, leaf ontogeny was an important factor controlling photosynthate distribution to the N- or C-pool, respectively, regardless of the leaf N status. and T. Shinano ... [et al.].
The effects of short-term exposure to chilling temperature (10 °C) on sucrose synthesis in leaves of the cold-tolerant sugarcane cultivars Saccharum sinense R. cv. Yomitanzan and Saccharum sp. cv. NiF4, and the cold-sensitive cultivar S. officinarum L. cv. Badila were studied. Plants were grown at day/night temperatures of 30/25 °C, and then shifted to a constant day/night temperature of 10 °C. After 52-h exposure to the chilling temperature, sucrose content in the leaves of NiF4 and Yomitanzan showed a 2.5- to 3.5-fold increase relative to that of the control plants that had been left on day/night temperatures of 30/25 °C. No such increase was observed in Badila leaves. Similarly, starch content in the leaves of NiF4 and Yomitanzan was maintained high, but starch was depleted in Badila leaves after the 52-h exposure. During the chilling temperature, sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS; E.C.2.4.1.14) activity was relatively stable in the leaves of NiF4 and Yomitanzan, whereas in Badila leaves SPS activity significantly decreased. There was no significant change in cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase activity for the three cultivars at the chilling temperature. This supports the hypothesis that: (1) on exposure to chilling temperature, sucrose content in sugarcane leaves is determined by the photosynthetic rate in the leaves, and is not related to SPS activity; (2) SPS activity in sugarcane leaves at chilling temperature is to be determined by sugar concentration in the leaves. and Yu-Chun Du, Akihiro Nose.
Three-year-old plants of Parthenium argentatum Gray cv. 11591 grown under natural photoperiod were exposed for 60 d to low night temperature (LNT) of 15 °C (daily from 18:00 to 06:00). Effects of the treatment on net photosynthetic rates (PN), rubber accumulation, and associated biochemical traits were examined. LNT initially reduced PN with a parallel decline in the activities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, fructose bisphosphatase, and sucrose phosphate synthase for 20-30 d. Later, LNT enhanced PN and the activities of photosynthetic enzymes. Associated with high PN in LNT-treated guayule plants was a two-fold increase in rubber content and rubber transferase activity per unit of protein. The initial decrease in PN in LNT-treated guayule was associated with low content of chlorophyll (a+b), large starch accumulation, and higher ratio of glucose-6-phosphate/fructose-6-phosphate. Photosystem 2 activity in isolated chloroplasts was initially decreased, but increased after 30 d. There was a significant increase in the leaf soluble protein content in LNT-treated plants. Hence the photosynthetic performance of plants grown at 15 °C night temperature for 50 d was superior to those grown under natural photoperiod in all parameters studied. The high photosynthetic capacity may contribute to superior rubber yields under LNT. and D. Sundar, A. Ramachandra Reddy.
Sucrose metabolism was studied at three leaf development stages in two Phaseolus vulgaris L. cultivars, Tacarigua and Montalban. The changes of enzyme activities involved in sucrose metabolism at the leaf development stages were: (1) Sink (9-11 % full leaf expansion, FLE): low total sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activity, and higher acid invertase (AI) activity accompanied by low sucrose synthase (SuSy) synthetic and sucrolytic activities. (2) Sink to source transition (40-47 % FLE): increase in total SPS and SuSy activities, decrease in AI activity. (3) Source (96-97 % FLE): high total SPS activity, increased SuSy activities, decreased AI activity. The hexose/sucrose ratio decreased from sink to source leaves in both bean cultivars. The neutral invertase activity was lower than that of AI; it showed an insignificant decrease during the sink-source transition.
Among four mulberry (Morus alba L.) cultivars (K-2, MR-2, BC2-59, and S-13), highest net photosynthetic rate (PN) was observed in BC2-59 while the lowest rates were recorded with K-2. Significant differences among the four cultivars were found in leaf area, biomass production, activities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and sucrose phosphate synthase, and glucose and sucrose contents. The PN and the activities of photosynthetic enzymes in the four cultivars were significantly correlated with the growth and biomass production measured as leaf yield, total shoot mass, and aerial plant biomass. and K. V. Chaitanya ... [et al.].